BULLS has announced three new models that will hit the dealers shopfloors this February:

The Six50 E2 Street is an eUrban/eTrekking speed pedelec that features a Bosch’s 350 W Performance Line speed pedelec motor, providing assistance up to 28mph and it packs a 500Wh battery. MSRP $3899

The Six50+ E FS 3, as the name implies, is a full suspension e-MTB also powered by Bosch’s 350W Performance Line motor and a 500W battery. Like the E2 it has a minimalist approach to handlebar clutter, using the sleek Intuvia handlebar display. MSRP: $4699

If you are a mountain bike fan of a certain age from the UK you might well have heard of Orange; for several years they produced the best selling MB in the country and now UK MB magazine Singletrack have reported spotting them dipping their toes in the e-MTB sea at the recent The Bike Place show.

The featured model uses Shimano’s e-MTB specific E8000 motor system. If the project does go into production it will be interesting to see where it is produced; Orange’s ‘serial’ models are made in Taiwan but there is still a number of high-end Orange bikes made in Halifax, UK.

Palais des congrès de Montréal Features Budnitz Model E

The Palais des congrès de Montréal is an ultramodern convention and exhibition center and it features the stylish Model E that features the Zehus Bike+ all-in-one rear hub and Gates belt drive. The Model E comes in either a titanium or chromoly frame. There are many more detailed pics of the Model E here.

Lightweight Wheel Reflectors

FLECTR say their new product is ‘the first wheel reflector made from foil.’ It promises not only to save weight over conventional (and very much less striking) plastic wheel reflectors but are also more aerodynamic.

In the early days of e-bikes there were many, many sceptical voices in the industry so its always nice to see and industry legend – in this case motocross and MTB helmet and kit designer Troy Lee – get behind pedal assist. Read the full article here. There’s also some hints about what might be arriving in the way of e-bike specific kit…

E-MTB Tutoring Italian Style

Well here’s an idea. There are of course cycling proficiency courses aplenty in the US and the UK but courses teaching the skills necessary to master electric mountain biking are few and far between. If you want to see what they might look like take a look at Gravity School’s video of the fun to be had on them in northern Italy.

Cycle Infrastructure

Oslo gets Behind E-cargo Bikes with Subsidies

Norway’s capital Oslo recently announced a subsidised scheme for e-cargo bikes, paying a quarter of the cost of those wanting buy such bikes (with a subsidy cap of US $1200). There are no income criteria for the subsidies – rich and poor alike can benefit – and the city has also announced plans to invest a staggering US$923 million on 10 broad, double lane cycle ‘super highways’ that will cross the city.

New E-bike Routefinding Service

Openrouteservice is an internet based route finding service based in Heidelberg, Germany. Like several other online route finders they have a cycle route option that automatically finds a route for you avoiding prohibited road options.

Directions magazine reports they have now added an e-bike option that does not discount hilly routes in the way it would for a regular bike route choice.

Manchester’s Possible Mayor Promises High Quality Infrastructure

In both the US and the UK city mayors can act as a real boost to getting high quality infrastructure built – think Bill de Blasion in New York or Boris Johnson in London.

Now mayoral candidate for UK’s Manchester is promising another two-wheeled transport revolution that can only be good news for cyclists and e-cyclists in the area. In a recent interview Andy Burnham outlined his vision for the major northern city that would include a high quality cycle network, a protected cycling budget, a bike share programme and eventually matching the funding goal of London, some £17 per head of the city population annually.

See the Cycling UK video here:

Dutch Cycle Grid for UK Village?

UK’s BikeBiz has reported on plans for a ‘Dutch style’ cycle grid in the planned Dissington Garden Village. While such welcome developments are rare in the UK, cycling charity Sustrans have been involved in creating home zones in the UK for a number of years. These themselves are based on the Dutch idea of ‘Woonerf’ – a residential area where less space is devoted to through motor traffic and more to pedestrian and cycle access.

For details of Toronto’s first Woonerf check out the video:

Awards

Pininfarina & Diavelo Winner of iF DESIGN AWARD

The Pininfarina E-voluzione won in the discipline Electric bicycles in the Sport and outdoor category. Each year, Germany’s oldest independent design organization,Hannover-based iF International Forum Design GmbH, organizes the iF DESIGN AWARD.

The Pininfarina E-voluzione features a full carbon frame with a mid-drive Brose motor and the battery is Diavelo’s patented solution with integration in the frame. More information on the Pininfarina E-voluzione can be found here.

Lumos Smart Helmet

The Lumos helmet with innovative LED lighting won the 2016 edition of Beazley Designs of the Year in the Transport category, an annual competition organised by The Design Museum in London. Here is a video of the helmet:

Regulations on technological doping were brought in in January 2015 and could see a rider given a minimum suspension of six months and a fine of anything between 20,000 and 200,000 Swiss Francs. The UCI, the sport’s governing body have also introduced checks specifically for hidden motors.

The Stromer ST2 S is a high tech and high end electric bike that has attracted a lot of attention and financial media Bloomberg is one of the latest to report on their findings after spending some time on the ST2 S.

Here is a good quote from the article “On the e-bike, it only took me 22 minutes in the dead of rush hour to make the 6.5-mile commute down Beachwood Canyon Drive in the Hollywood Hills to downtown Beverly Hills on Santa Monica Boulevard. Compare that to 34 minutes on a regular bike or almost 40 minutes sitting in a Tesla. It’s hard not to be smug, cruising through gridlock at 30 mph. I start to imagine a city free from the shackles of cars, an empty 405 freeway, a smog-free utopia.”